is the expanded threaded list (once logged in) and the ability to create polls and stories (at least I don’t recall being able to do that w/ Php Nuke).

I’d like to say, “congrats to Robster and others” for doing a great job on the transition. I didn’t notice it had changed until I looked carefully. It looks like in the long run Drupal will be much cooler after some of the bugs get killed.

I’d really prefer if the stylesheet left my fonts alone. I don’thave an anti-aliased version of Helvetica and I don’t see howDP would be any less interesting or worthwhile without Helvetica.(Perhaps DP has always used its own font, but this is as good a timeto change it as any).

I have one minor gripe with Drupal: the topic icon overlaps the text inside the stories with mozilla. An example is in the WOody release Status update, the Debian logo is on top of the right side of the text of the first paragraph. Hhm, it looks fine with netscape 4.7x, but not in today’s nightly build of mozilla.

Well, its not a big deal, but it does make the page look a little less than slick.

Well, the icon in the poll results overwrites the graphics in Konqueror 3.0.3 (does this on kerneltrap, too, so I guess it’s a drupal feature rather than a debianPlanet problem). Not that it’s all that iritating…

New poll: What is Drupal ? 1- Your new Drew Barrimore pen pal clone. 2- Debianplanets new something that rocks to some and sucks to others. 3- The name of the new transexual transvestite Spice Girl. 4- Some, none or all of the above.

I very much like the new site (you can actually edit your user details and change your password now!).

One thing I think is odd is how the topic image is displayed in the bottom-right corner of the article summary instead of the upper-left has been done in every other site. Why is this? My personal preference would be a 1/2 size image in the upper-right. 🙂

I also gripe that the right-column often requires me to scroll my browser window, but I suppose that’s my problem? Anyways, don’t mean to just gripe, I like it a lot better, and aside from those two issues it seems like it’s working great!

PS – people are talking about several other CMS systems on here, well what about Geeklog? I’ve not spent that much time evaluating such solutions, but it has always seemed nice to me. 🙂

As a huge postnuke fan and ardent user, I was hoping to see DP move to postnuke. This drupal does look very interesting though, I’ll have to check it out further.

I’m actually surprised at the amount of linux sites that run php-nuke, considering that the author is very closed about phpnuke development, postnuke is a much better alternative (especially now that the core code has been replaced completely, and no longer shares a similar codebase to phpnuke).

If the DP guys could post on how the install/migration went I’m sure alot of us would appreciate it. Specifically, did drupal convert the nuke tables automatically, or was that done by hand?

I second this question. I am currently trying to decide on php-nuke, postnuke, or (now) drupal. I believe DP used to run php-nuke, and that did seem to work well from the users. What main differences are there between php-nuke and drupal that make it better?

&nbsp &nbsp &nbsp &nbsp &nbsp I second this question. I am currently trying to decide on php-nuke, postnuke, or (now) drupal.

That is precisely the question that I am pondering, to wit, which CMS (content management system) is best? I had decided on PostNuke and OpenCMS, but, after seeing DP has switched to Drupal (not PostNuke or OpenCMS), I am beginning to question the wisdom of my initial decision. Should I try Drupal instead? Or maybe all three, and let my clients (who would be the users) decide?

&nbsp &nbsp &nbsp &nbsp &nbsp I would especially like a CMS that has extensive “community-ware” features such as Slash-style moderation and “karma.”